Globalisation and Japanese Organisational Culture

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A01=Mitchell Sedgwick
Author_Mitchell Sedgwick
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Conferring
corporations
Cross-cultural Relations
Dense
engineers
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eq_business-finance-law
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Face To Face
firms
Follow
french
French Engineers
Held
Japanese Colleagues
Japanese Corporation
Japanese Engineer
Japanese Firms
Japanese Managers
Japanese Members
Japanese Multinational Corporations
Japanese Organisational Culture
Japanese Organisations
magnetic
Magnetic Products
Magnetic Tape
managers
Men And Machines
Midday
mother
multinational
Passive Agents
Personal Displacement
plant
Postwar
QC Circle
tape

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415446785
  • Weight: 590g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Dec 2007
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Globalisation – the global movement, and control, of products, capital, technologies, persons and images – increasingly takes place through the work of organisations, perhaps the most powerful of which are multinational corporations. Based in an ethnographic analysis of cross-cultural social interactions in everyday workplace practices at a subsidiary of an elite, Japanese consumer electronics multinational in France, this book intimately examines, and theorises, contemporary global dynamics. Japanese corporate ‘know-how’ is described not simply as the combination of technological innovation riding on financial ‘clout’ but as a reflection of Japanese social relations, powerfully expressed in Japanese organisational dynamics. The book details how Japanese organisational power does and does not adapt in overseas settings: how Japanese managers and engineers negotiate conflicts between their understanding of appropriate practices with those of local, non-Japanese staff – in this case, French managers and engineers – who hold their own distinctive cultural and organisational inclinations in the workplace. The book argues that the insights provided by the intimate study of persons interacting within and across organisations is crucial to a fulsome understanding of globalisation. This is assisted, further, by a grounded examination of how ‘networks’– as social constructions – are both expanded and bounded, a move which assists in collapsing the common reliance on micro and macro levels of analysis in considering global phenomena. The book poses important theoretical and methodological challenges for organisational studies as well as for analysis of the forces of globalisation by anthropologists and other social scientists.

Mitchell W. Sedgwick is Senior Lecturer in Anthropology, and Director of the Europe Japan Research Centre at Oxford Brookes University, UK. He was formerly Associate Director of the Program on US-Japan Relations, Harvard University, and Yasuda Fellow at the Faculty of Oriental Studies, and affiliated with King's College, University of Cambridge. During the 1980s Dr Sedgwick was a consulting organisational anthropologist in South East Asia and West Africa for the World Bank, and later worked in Cambodia on its first post war election for the United Nations.

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